4.6 Article

Assessment of Poorly Compactable Sands by Recycling and Recompaction: Experimental Program and Packing Particle Analysis

Journal

MATERIALS
Volume 15, Issue 23, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ma15238697

Keywords

poorly compactable sand; recycled; particle packing analysis; void ratios; coordination number; breakage particle index

Funding

  1. Consejeria de Economia, Ciencia y Agenda Digital de la Junta de Extremadura
  2. European Regional Development Fund of the European Union
  3. [GR21143]

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The article introduces a mechanical stabilization technique based on repetitive recycling and recompaction without binder to improve poorly compactable sands, reducing construction waste and raw material consumption.
Compaction is a common ground improvement technique based on the densification of soils for an energy level and optimum water content, mainly influenced by the particle size and curve gradation. Poorly compactable sands, characterized as cohesionless, fine and uniformly graded, are a challenge for earthworks since compaction is not effective due to the lack of a larger range of particle sizes to infill the voids and the compaction energy is not relevant either. These characteristics are common to other materials, i.e., desert sand, industrial or mining by-products or quarry fines, which are mostly discarded to landfill and replaced by proper soils, causing serious environmental issues. To enlarge the technical feasibilities of poorly compactable sands, reducing construction waste and raw material consumption, a mechanical stabilization, based on a repetitive series of recycling and recompaction without binder, is experimentally explored. The behavior observed is also analyzed from reported correlations and a packing particle approach, attending to densification stage, saturation degree, recompaction series, coordination number and packing density. The improvement achieved is moderate and dependent on the cycles applied, showing a characteristic repetitive pattern in the compaction curve, and approaching the estimated minimum void ratio and the theoretical maximum packing possibilities without degradation of the material.

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